How Ryanair passenger who was sucked out of plane window was saved by his hero wife who held onto his feet for five minutes

Oxygen masks dropped. A scream tore through the cabin. For five endless minutes, a woman refused to let her husband die at 30,000 feet, clinging to his legs as his body was dragged out of a shattered Ryanair window. Passengers sobbed. He fainted, revived, fainted again. Blood, wind, terror. Then, suddenly, the gri…

It began like any routine budget flight, climbing out of Thessaloniki toward Germany. Then a sharp crack split the cabin and a window burst open, turning the aisle into a wind tunnel of freezing air and panic. A 61‑year‑old Serbian passenger seated by the window was wrenched forward, his head and shoulders forced outside the aircraft, lacerated by the jagged frame. His wife locked her arms around his legs and refused to let go, even as he slipped in and out of consciousness.

Around them, oxygen masks dropped, children screamed and adults whispered prayers, convinced they would not survive. Fellow passengers fought the gale to help drag the man back inside, while the pilots turned the Boeing 737-800 for an emergency return to Thessaloniki. When the wheels finally hit the runway, there were no cheers, only stunned silence, tears, and the quiet realisation that a catastrophe had been avoided by inches—and by one woman’s refusal to let the person she loved be taken by the sky.